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Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton was an Irish-born British explorer who was a principal figure of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton was a British explorer who in 1901 joined an expedition to the Antarctic. He was sent home early due to bad health. Devoted to creating a legacy, he led the Trans-Antarctic Expedition. Disaster struck when his ship, the Endurance, was crushed by ice. He and his crew drifted on sheets of ice for months until they reached Elephant Island. Shackleton eventually rescued his crew,
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Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton was an Irish-born British explorer who was a principal figure of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton was a British explorer who in 1901 joined an expedition to the Antarctic. He was sent home early due to bad health. Devoted to creating a legacy, he led the Trans-Antarctic Expedition. Disaster struck when his ship, the Endurance, was crushed by ice. He and his crew drifted on sheets of ice for months until they reached Elephant Island. Shackleton eventually rescued his crew,
"Difficulties are just things to overcome, after all."
– Ernest Shackleton
all of whom survived the ordeal. He later died while setting out on another Antarctic expedition.
Explorer. Ernest Henry Shackleton
was born February 15, 1874, in County Kildare, Ireland. The second of
10 children and oldest son, he was raised in London, where his family
moved when Shackleton was a young boy.
Despite the urging of his father, a doctor, that he follow in his footsteps
and go to medical school, the 16-year-old Shackleton joined the merchant
navy, achieving the rank of first mate by the age of 18, and becoming
a certified master mariner six years later.
Those early years in the merchant navy saw Shackleton travel extensively.
In 1901 he joined noted British naval officer and explorer Robert Falcon
Scott on a difficult trek to the South Pole that placed the two men,
plus one other, closer to the Arctic than anyone else previously. The
trip, however, ended poorly for Shackleton, who fell seriously ill and
had to return home.
His return to England led Shackleton to pursue a career in journalism;
later he was tapped to be secretary to the Scottish Geographical Society.
He also made an unsuccessful attempt at becoming a member of Parliament.
Shackleton's South Pole expedition
with Scott sparked within the young explorer an obsession to reach the
Antarctic. In 1907 he made another attempt at achieving his goal, but
again he fell short, coming within 97 miles of the pole before brutal
conditions forced him to turn back.
In 1911, Shackleton's dream of becoming the first person to set foot
on the South Pole was shattered, when Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen
reached the earth's most southerly point. The achievement forced Shackleton
to set his sights on a new mark: crossing Antarctica via the South Pole.
On August 1, 1914, the same day Germany declared war on Russia, Shackleton
departed London on the ship Endurance for his third trip to the South
Pole. By late fall the crew had reached South Georgia in the southern
Atlantic. On December 5, the team departed the island, the last time
Shackleton and his men would touch land for an astonishing 497 days.
In January 1915, the Endurance became trapped in ice, ultimately forcing
Shackleton to lead his men to vacate the ship and set up camp on the
floating ice. After the boat sank later that year, Shackleton embarked
on an escape in April 1916, in which he and his men crowded into three
small boats and made their way to Elephant Island.
Seven hard days on the water culminated in the team reaching their destination,
but there was still little hope in getting rescued on the uninhabited
island, which, because of its location, sat far outside normal shipping
lanes.
Seeing that his men were on the precipice of disaster, Shackleton led
a team of five others out on the water again. They boarded a 22-foot
lifeboat and navigated their way toward South Georgia. Sixteen days
after setting out, the crew reached the island, where Shackleton trekked
to a whaling station to organize an rescue effort.
On August 25, 1916, Shackleton returned to Elephant Island to rescue
the remaining members of his crew Astonishingly, not a single member
of his 28-men team died during the nearly two years they were stranded.
In 1919 Shackleton published South,
his detailed account of the journey and its miraculous ending. Shackleton,
however, was not through with expeditions. In late 1921 he set off on
a fourth mission to the South Pole. His goal was to circumnavigate the
Antarctic. But on January 5, 1922, Shackleton suffered a heart attack
on his ship and died. He was buried in South Georgia.
Reverence for Shackleton's heroism and leadership didn't immediately
follow. But over the last half-century, as his story became the subject
of more historical research, the account of the Endurance and how Shackleton
averted total disaster has elevated his standing and made him a principal
figure of the period known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration.